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Double Team: A Menage Romance Page 36
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I tell myself I’ll just be a minute. I tell myself that I can’t possibly go to dinner like this. I can’t sit at the same table as Albie in my current state.
That’s what I tell myself as I lock the door to the bedroom.
That’s what I tell myself to justify the fact that I’m going to be late for a dinner with the king and soon-to-be-queen of a damn country, for goodness’ sake.
I’m not the kind of girl who lets her libido get the best of her. My ex-fiancé never left me feeling like this – not once.
No one has ever left me feeling like this.
Running my fingers up the sides of my thighs, I pull the fabric of the black dress – the very proper, very appropriate, very subdued black dress chosen by whatever stylist my mother hired to fill this closet in the room – up around my waist.
I glance at the secret panel on the wall where Albie disappeared. Just for a second, I almost wish he would reappear right now.
But I push thoughts of him out of my mind. I don’t need to think about Albie, with that smug, self-satisfied grin of his, the one I imagine drives women wild.
The throbbing between my legs is incessant, demanding, refusing to be ignored, and I tell myself that has nothing to do with thoughts of Albie. And it certainly has nothing to do with what he just did. It has nothing to do with his breath on my neck, his fingertips running softly across my skin.
My skirt ruched up around my waist, I slip my fingers between my thighs, finding my clit, and press my fingertips against it, sighing louder than I’d like at the relief that immediately floods my body.
I sink onto the bed, lying here in this room touching myself while, at this very moment, everyone in my brand-spanking-new family is on the other side of the palace in the dining room.
Including Albie.
Deliciously sexy Albie.
Dark-haired, blue-but-more-periwinkle eyed Albie, who has a reputation for bedding every model and actress in the western hemisphere.
Albie, the epitome of a shallow, arrogant, entitled man.
He’s everything I should find repulsive.
Except, right now, as my fingertips slide over and over my clit, moving in circles until arousal courses through my body, he’s the person I picture.
I imagine him with his lips near my ear, his warm breath against my neck, asking me if I’m wet for him. Goosebumps dot my skin, a chill traveling down my spine as I think of him.
My eyes closed, my fingers dancing over my clit – over and over until my heart races in my chest, until my breath comes so short that I’m nearly breathless – I think of him. I imagine him with his head buried between my thighs, my dress pulled up around my waist, his tongue tasting me.
I think of his tongue, hot between my legs, flicking over my clit until I can’t do anything except call his name.
I imagine my fingers threaded through his hair, my legs wrapped around his shoulders.
I can almost feel him sliding his fingers inside me, fucking me until I pant his name.
I’m so far gone, brought so close to the edge by just the thought of his mouth between my legs, that I can barely keep myself from crying out when I crash over.
And Albie’s name is on my lips.
“I’m so pleased that you decided to join us, Isabella.” My mother raises her glass of wine to her lips. Her chilly tune conveys the exact opposite of her words, and the look she gives me is just as frosty as her voice.
She’s pissed off that I’m late for dinner.
I’m afraid the reason I’m late is written all over my face, that my guilt is immediately evident. Even as I slide into my seat at the table, I can’t get the thought of Albie as I imagined him – naked, throbbing, irresistible – out of my head.
That fact sends heat to my face, and I know I’m blushing.
I glance at Albie, and immediately regret it. Evidently, he finds my current state amusing.
“Yes,” Albie says, “I was afraid you’d gotten lost, that we’d have to send a search and rescue party after you.”
“I had to finish up something,” I say, trying to keep my voice composed, settled. Nonchalant.
I might be failing terribly at the nonchalant part of things.
“Well, I hope you know that I’m always willing to help with whatever needs attending to,” Albie says, looking at me meaningfully. Arousal washes over me like a wave, and I shift uncomfortably in my seat, crossing one leg over the other.
“I’m sure,” Alexandra snorts, rolling her eyes. She flicks a strand of hair over her shoulder and looks at me across the table. And winks.
I might actually die of embarrassment right now, if my mother didn’t interrupt to present me to the other guests at the table. She rattles off the names and positions of the grandmother, two aunts, an uncle, and three cousins. I nod, feigning interest in the social pleasantries but mostly just distracting myself from the incessant throbbing between my legs.
“Oh Albert, you are always such a gentleman.” Albie’s grandmother beams at Albie, adoration written all over her face. She’s regal, poised from head to toe, dressed in a cream-colored suit with a single strand of pearls, her grey hair pulled up into a loose bun.
Her words bring a fresh snort from Alexandra, and I wonder what she suspects, or if she’s just being obnoxious.
“Yes, you’re quite considerate, Albert,” my mother says before turning to put her hand on the king’s arm. King Leopold looks at her and smiles, obviously smitten with her.
“Isabella, I was told you’ve spent the last few years doing charity work.” One of the aunts, Victoria something-or-other, interrupts.
“Oh, I adore charity work,” the blonde cousin says. The cousins are triplets, two blondes and a brunette, with matching names: Lily, Rose, and Violet. “I just love all of the dinner parties and fundraising. In Paris once, we – oh, what was your cause?”
“My cause?” I ask, looking at her blankly.
“Your charity,” Lily says, staring at me. “Your cause. Hunger, shoes for poor children, whatever.”
“I wasn’t actually hosting parties and fundraising,” I say, starting to explain what I’d been doing the last two years.
“Oh,” Rose says, her brow furrowed. “What kind of fundraising were you doing?”
My mother interrupts. “Isabella means to say that she was working with a non-profit group.”
“Working?” the dark-haired triplet, Violet, asks. Her nose wrinkled, she looks at me like I’m a different species. “Working, as in a job?”
“I was working, yes,” I say. This entire conversation is beginning to sound surreal. “In Africa, actually.”
“Isabella,” my mother says, her voice unnaturally bright. “You must tell us all about it later, perhaps at a time other than when we’re celebrating.”
“I would love to hear about Africa sometime, Isabella,” the King says, his voice warm. “There’s an aid organization from Protrovia that you might have worked with. From what your mother has told me, I believe they may have been in the same region you were.”
“You were in Africa?” The King’s mother sniffs. “Isn’t that rather dangerous?”
“Actually, I –“ I start, before my mother interrupts.
“His Royal Highness tells me you’re spending the fall semester in Paris,” my mother says, directing her attention to Lily.
Lily rolls her eyes. “I guess,” she says. “Semester abroad and all that. I’m supposed to expand my horizons. It’s not like I haven’t been to Paris a million times before.”
The triplets sound bored with everything – bored with this dinner, bored with the company, bored with their wealth, bored with their lives. They’re every kid of every socialite parent I attended high school with in Manhattan.
“I’m going to New York,” Violet interrupts, leaning forward. “Back to design school.”
“I don’t know what you’re going to do with fashion design,” the king’s mother says. “In my day, women of means learned certa